Spiral Water introduces treatment system for biogas production

The Model HS-RNG Feedstock Conditioner, placed before an anaerobic digester, conditions flows to increase gas production and lower operational expenditures.
Dec. 18, 2023
2 min read

Spiral Water Technologies has announced a new wastewater treatment system for the production of biogas: the Model HS-RNG Feedstock Conditioner.

This system, which integrates the company’s proven technology with specialized process flow conditioning, is in use at several dairy farms around the U.S. As part of a multi-stage separation approach, it has been shown to condition feedstocks for higher yield gas production and lower operational expenditures (OpEx).

Placed before an anaerobic digester, the new Spiral Water system also conditions and optimizes volatile Total Suspended Solids (TSS) and Volatile Suspended Solids (VSS) by breaking down deformable solids and making for a more nutrient-rich feedstock liquor that then goes through the specifically selected micron screens to the digester.

Depending on the feedstock, with this system the anaerobic digesters are expected to create 10-30 percent more methane in the same footprint in a shorter digestion cycle time.

In addition, because the filters clean mechanically, they also remove non-digestibles from the wastewater stream. By keeping digester tanks cleaner, the filters also help to reduce OpEx.

“Spiral Water systems have proven to be a key component in small and midsized anerobic digestion systems,” said Gerard J. Lynch, CEO of Spiral Water. “By effectively removing inorganic non-digestible solids and homogenizing digestible solids, we increase gas production as well as reduce operating costs wasted on removing non-digestible solids from the gas digester. The result is a cleaner, more productive anerobic digester system.”

Other benefits include less retention time; no chemicals; lower energy requirements; less maintenance and labor costs than with traditional systems; less CapEx and OpEx than using centrifuges; and the potential for a smaller digester footprint in a newly constructed system.

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